Thomas Forbes, the older brother, probably arrived in
Charles Town,
South Carolina before the
American Revolution and began meeting his future trading partners of Panton, Leslie and Company. His maternal uncle,
John Gordon, had arrived around 1760. John Gordon and Company hired William Panton as a clerk in 1765 while importing goods from Europe that were sold to colonists and traded with the
Cherokee and Creek (
Muscogee) nations that controlled land west and south of the
Southern Colonies. In 1772, Gordon named Panton as one of his attorneys. Another future partner and fellow Scotsman, John Leslie, began trading in the Charleston area before 1779, but primarily did business in
East Florida. Just before John Forbes arrived, all prior companies were dissolved when William Panton, John Leslie, Thomas Forbes, William Alexander and Charles McLatchy formed
Panton, Leslie and Company in 1783. The new firm expanded into Florida and came to dominate the Indian trade from St. Augustine to Pensacola. In 1784, John Forbes sailed from Scotland to the Bahamas, where the company maintained wharves and warehouses, and then to St. Augustine, headquarters of the company in East Florida. He was shortly assigned to assist William Panton at the West Florida headquarters and to manage the store in Mobile, West Florida (Alabama did not become a
U.S. territory until
1817.) Panton, Leslie and Company and its successors engaged in the
triangular trade, bringing manufactured goods to Africa via ship, which would traded for
slaves. The slaves would be then be taken
across the Atlantic to the
West Indies and the
Thirteen Colonies and sold to
planters, including some Creek Indian chiefs. Rum, sugar, salt and indigo were acquired in the West Indies and taken to the North American mainland. Other goods, including firearms, gunpowder and lead bullets were exchanged with the Indians in return for deer hides and peltries. Hides, cotton, tobacco, sugar, rum and rice were taken back to Europe and sold to purchase merchandise for the next round of trade. All of the partners of Panton, Leslie and Company were Scots who remained steadfast
loyalists (referred to in the colonies as "
Tories") during the Revolutionary War. The decision was pragmatic because their trade depended on manufactured goods which could not be made in the colonies. The partners came under attack from
Patriots, and they were declared treasonous by the Committee for Safety in South Carolina. Owing to the hazards of staying in the rebelling colonies, in 1776 the partners moved to
St. Augustine, Florida, which remained a haven for loyalists until the British government transferred the territory back to Spain in
1783 Peace of Paris. William Panton and Thomas Forbes developed a working relationship with the Governor of East Florida,
Patrick Tonyn. Their trading firm operated out of East Florida and Nassau in the Bahamas, acquiring trading posts along the St. Mary's and St. Johns rivers and plantations that grew indigo, rice, tobacco and cotton. The firm periodically imported African slaves who worked the plantations or were sold to other owners. Thomas also managed a very successful operation in the Bahamas. When the Revolutionary War concluded, the British government transferred East and West Florida (which was under
de facto Spanish control) to Spain. The new governors viewed the Indian trade as a key element in controlling the territory, and soon learned that the Creeks in particular preferred to deal with Panton, Leslie and Company. The partners gained status as agents of the Crown and were granted a near monopoly on trade. Pensacola soon garnered the most business, and Panton, Leslie and Company moved its headquarters from St. Augustine to Pensacola. ==Creek and Seminole Indian trade==